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ITALIAN WEBSITES

Domain and Website Information:

epode.it

Italiano




About site:


Domain name - epode.it


Site title - Marketing Sanitario - EPODE


Go to website - Marketing Sanitario - EPODE



Words count at epode.it:

per - 23
che - 18
nel - 17
digitale - 15
sanitario - 14
marketing - 12
settore - 11
con - 11
del - 11
una - 10

See complete list



Site GEO location


Location Country - The Netherlands



Registration Country - United States



City/Town - Groningen



Provider - GOOGLE



epode.it GEO Location on Map



Site Logo






Information for domain epode.it


IP address:

35.214.222.76


Domain name servers:


ns2.siteground.net ns1.siteground.net


All records:


☆ epode.it. 3600 IN TXT "google-site-verification=p4ZTUAELE9paro4JNOFggm3Qln09U3PoFgGIAim611U"
☆ epode.it. 3600 IN TXT "v=spf1 +a +mx +ip4:35.214.158.52 include:epode.it.spf.auto.dnssmarthost.net ~all"
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN A 35.214.222.76
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN NS ns2.siteground.net.
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN NS ns1.siteground.net.
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN MX 30 mx30.antispam.mailspamprotection.com.
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN MX 20 mx20.antispam.mailspamprotection.com.
☆ epode.it. 21600 IN MX 10 mx10.antispam.mailspamprotection.com.
☆ epode.it. 14400 IN SOA ns1.siteground.net. root.gnldm1074.siteground.biz. 100175 86400 7200 3600000 86400



Whois server information for epode.it



Brief facts about epode:

According to one meaning of the word, an epode is the third part of an ancient Greek choral ode that follows the strophe and the antistrophe and completes the movement. The word epode is also used to refer to the second line of a two-line stanza of the kind composed by Archilochus and Hipponax in which the first line consists of a dactylic hexameter or an iambic trimeter. It can also be used, to refer to poems written in such stanzas.

Prosody (Latin) - Latin prosody is the study of Latin poetry and its laws of meter. The following article provides an overview of those laws as practised by Latin poets in the late Roman Republic and early Roman Empire, with verses by Catullus, Horace, Virgil and Ovid as models.

Ancient Greek theatre

 

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